[3] After serving his articles with William Joseph Napier[4] he was admitted as a barrister of the Supreme Court of New Zealand on 18 February 1926.
[5] Goldstine was a successful barrister and solicitor, and was described in court as displaying 'a doggedness and persistence which is noticeable even for a lawyer, and listeners have no cause to complain that his utterances are mumbled or indistinct'.
[17] The commission adopted the Court's strict dress code of wigs and gowns, somewhat to the dismay of the Law Society.
[18] In the 1946 New Year Honours, he was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, for patriotic and social welfare services.
[22] Upon learning of her death, the chairman of the Auckland Transport Board, W. H. Nagle, paid tribute to the charitable, philanthropic and civic activities of Solomon and her devotion to humanitarian causes.
[4] He frequently played golf in Maungakiekie and was quoted as saying: "I have no pretensions to being a 'real' golfer, but I live in hope of reducing my handicap some day.